An Oasis in a Food Desert

In West Oakland, California, the only source of food used to be corner stores and fast food restaurants. "Being short of breath, the hazy vision and all that—it would come and go, but I never thought of it as a big thing. I thought that was just normal health," says Ennis, a West Oakland resident who now works with Mandela Marketplace, a cooperative that buys healthy food grown on regional farms
and then distributes it throughout the community at affordable prices—both at the market itself and from corner stores, where a team of area youth delivers fresh
produce by bicycle.

"The work that we do connects two populations that have traditionally been left out of the mainstream food system: small-scale minority farmers and urban markets like West Oakland," says Quinton, the programs director for Mandela MarketPlace.

"A lot of the things in our neighborhood we can't control," he points out. "There's substandard housing all around, there's environmental pollution all around. But at the end of the day, you select what you put in your body."

Learn more by visiting the .

It all begins with food: How to restore the health and wealth of inner-city communities.

How to grow food where we need it.

In our increasingly consolidated food
industry, the origins of what we eat are often hidden. How can you find
out where your food is coming from?

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